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When the Clock Strikes 13 Kindle Edition

4.2 out of 5 stars 67 ratings

Tick – tock Tick – tock Tick – tock Your time is running out. When the clock strikes 13, all manners of hell will break loose. When the Clock Strikes 13 is a collection of thirteen short horror stories by some of the best horror and dark fiction authors writing today. Inside, you will find stories to frighten, shock and gnaw at your inner fears, and take you places that belong only in the dark recesses of your mind. There are monsters on these pages; some are human, some are not. Table of Contents Introduction by Joe Mynhardt “The Boy in the Pond” by Mark Allan Gunnells “Open Waters” by Richard Thomas “Memories” by John R. Little “Detrition of War” by Kenneth W. Cain “Comes the Red Man” by Tom Deady “Mommy’s Girl” by Somer Canon “Taking Up Carpentry” by Justin M. Woodward “Kill Point Club” by Steve Thompson “Calm Down Time” by Richard Chizmar “Carrion: My Wayward Son” by James Newman “Bear” by Michelle Garza and Melissa Lason “When Arachnids Attack” by Sheri White “A Song Above” by Glenn Rolfe Afterword by Steve Thompson "A creepy, eerie, and often emotionally resonant collection by some of the finest voices in horror." -- Jeff Strand, author of Dweller. “From the seemingly benign domestic to the war-ravaged deserts of the Middle East and all theaters in between, When the Clock Strikes 13 offers up dark terrors as wolves in sheep’s clothing—tales that sneak up on you and sink tooth and claw before you can scream.” --Dino Parenti, author of Dead Reckoning and Other Stories "An anthology that harkens back to the golden age of horror...not that golden age, I'm talking about the one where every cover had a hologram skeleton or malefic child or baby doll on it. It's brimming with horrors--traditional and not-so-much-- penned by a posse of authors, some new and others well-seasoned who don't fail to deliver the goods in spades crusted with graveyard dirt gripped in blood-stained hands. " --John Boden, author of Jedi Summer with the Magnetic Kid "With stories that will make you feel and think—thick with atmosphere and originality and at times sprinkled with delightfully sinister wit—When the Clock Strikes 13 is a fantastic first anthology from In Your Face Books that pulls together some of the finest authors in the genre today!" --Jason Parent, author of They Feed and Victoria “A devil’s dozen of terror tales for horror hounds to sink their fangs into. Original fiction from established names, and talented up-and-comers, with standout stories by Tom Deady, Justin Woodward, and James Newman worth the cover price alone, When the Clock Strikes 13 is a must for any fear fan’s chopping list!” --Adam Howe, author of Scapegoat and Die Dog or Eat the Hatchet
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Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07NLKK3CR
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ In Your Face Books
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 31, 2019
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ 1st
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 5.2 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 186 pages
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 16 - 18 years
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 out of 5 stars 67 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
67 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers enjoy the book's horror storyline, with one review noting its diverse topics ranging from hauntings to creepy crawlies. The writing quality receives positive feedback, with customers finding it well written.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

3 customers mention "Horror storyline"3 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the horror stories in the book, with one review noting the diverse topics ranging from hauntings to creepy crawlies, while another describes it as a fun romp through biting horror.

"...The stories are also quite diverse in topic from hauntings to creepy crawlies, from creatures which should not exist to calamitous murder...." Read more

"stories were all good" Read more

"Love Horror? Read this book!! You will be pleasantly surprised...." Read more

3 customers mention "Writing quality"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book well written, with one mentioning it is simple to read.

"...or 3 really good stories per anthology but in this book,all were very well written.(IMHO) Being ADHD if it's not interesting immediately -- I lose..." Read more

"...This book was simple to read and you’ll appreciate this book for that." Read more

"is well written..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2019
    Edited by Kenneth W. Cain with an Introduction by Joe Mynhardt and an Afterword by Steve Thompson When the Clock Strikes 13 (2019) is a new anthology of, appropriately enough, thirteen original horror stories by a diverse collection of writers. Although some are award nominees and winners, for many readers the writers assembled may be quite well known while others are others not. The stories are also quite diverse in topic from hauntings to creepy crawlies, from creatures which should not exist to calamitous murder.

    Mark Allan Gunnells kicks off the collection with “The Boy in the Pond.” A paranormal investigator is called by a family having seen the body of their five-year-old under the water of a frozen pond. The problem is the drowned boy had been found a year earlier and his body buried; it is his ghost that is under the ice—a ghost the family wants to be rid of—a ghost who has something very urgent to communicate.

    It is human nature to try to escape from regret and grief sometimes leading to dire consequences, and the character in “Open Waters” by Richard Thomas is no exception. His unique addiction leads him down a path toward the inability to “differentiate between waking life and… dreams.”

    In “Memories” John R. Little presents a couple suddenly facing a very personal, potentially tragic dilemma which is oddly resolved by a totally different domestic tragedy with a Back to the Future-like twist.

    As if the war in Afghanistan isn’t a horror unto itself, Kenneth W. Cain introduces something even more dreadful than unending combat in “Detrition of War.” The fast-moving story has an American Muslim volunteer facing off with a dreadful terror capable of spreading its “infection.”

    In “Comes the Red Man” by Tom Deady a therapist with twenty-five years of experience has just about heard it all and treated just about every kind of condition, but faith-healer Reverend Mather may be an exception. Therapy may not offer a solution to the evil which lurks behind the Reverend’s feelings of guilt and the deaths of “more than three hundred” and “over one thousand” injuries during a tent fire revival meeting over which Mather presides.

    At a time when readers and movie audiences are almost getting used to love stories between humans and sea-like creatures, Somer Canon proves such love can have a very dark and deadly side to it—especially for young Lysia in “Mommy’s Girl”—complete with a few Lovecraftian overtones.

    It is something much more pernicious than a raven doing “tap tap tapping” in Justin’s Woodword’s “Taking up Carpentry” and the consequences are most ironic as well as calamitous.

    Steve Thompson’s “Kill Point Club” may be a warning about how some things (in this case, killing!) can become exuberant, addictive, messy, and lead to unforeseen consequences for a diseased mind. More than anything, however, it is a humorous, dark little comedy. Inside jokes utilizing other writers’ names and one of their book titles adds to the fun.

    Sometimes monsters really do lurk in the darkness as a hapless widow discovers in Richard Chizmar’s tense, ironically entitled tale, “Calm Down Time.”

    A father’s pride in his son glows from the darkness of James Newman’s “Carrion: My Wayward Son”—a darkness few writers pull off as well as Newman.

    Unconditional love collides with counterfeit love and obsessiveness on a lonely stretch of highway in Phoenix during a monsoon in the haunting tale, “Bear” by Michelle Garza and Melissa Lason. In ways, the story is one of the collection’s most disturbing.

    Having moved into an apartment infested with roaches is disgusting enough for Andrea and Joel, but it is nothing compared to when Joel first finds a little spider and its web in their cupboard in Sheri White’s “When Arachnids Attack.” Shorter than some of the stories in the collection, arachnophobes are going to be squirming their way through this one.

    Twin brothers hide together for survival in a post-apocalyptic world in the final story in the collection, “A Song Above” by Glenn Rolfe. Much to their distress and dismay, the brothers discover “life evolves.”

    Publisher Steve Thompson provides an insightful Afterword explaining how and why When the Clock Strikes 13 became to be and short biographies of the writers are provided at the end of the book.

    As with many anthologies, readers are likely to prefer some of the stories in When the Clock Strikes 13 over others based upon the kind of horror they prefer. The author’s predilection and degree of profundity in their story may also play a role in reader preferences among the thirteen stories which range from the near simplistic to the more provocative. Most of the stories in the collection tend to reflect an author not taking themselves too seriously and in addition to “Kill Point Club,” readers will be quick to notice the same in-house joke running through many of the stories regarding one of the other writer’s name. All in all, When the Clock Strikes 13 is a light, fun romp through some biting horror.
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2019
    Review copy

    When the Clock Strikes 13 is an invitation-only anthology. Steve Thompson is a fan of horror and as such he wanted to publish an anthology featuring stories by his favorite authors. The result is a treat for all fans of the genre.

    The Boy In the Pond by Mark Allen Gunnells - A paranormal investigator is hired by a family to rid them of their son's spirit trapped below the ice in their pond. A brutally haunting tale and a superb opening for this collection.

    Open Waters by Richard Thomas - A beautifully written story of a future where we take solace where we can.

    Memories by John R. Little - I loved this telling of a family curse which leads to tragic consequences.

    Detrition of War by Kenneth W. Cain - Nothing like a good old "creature" story.

    Comes the Red Man by Tom Deady - Tom is one of my favorite writers and this is another fine story from this Bram Stoker Award-winning author. A holy man is haunted by those who perished in a fire which consumed the tent in which he was conducting a service.

    Mommy's Girl by Somer Canon - Somer is the real deal and this is a wonderful introduction to her writing. A local beach kid meets a boy on the boardwalk during a cloud burst and things take a decidedly weird turn.

    Taking Up Carpentry by Justin M. Woodward - An abusive step-father gets his due in a rather unique way. "'Doug isn't a bad man, he's just tired a lot, and you shouldn't test him when he's tired.' On a cold night in January, my sister, Anna, found out just how tired Doug could get,"

    Kill Point Club by Steve Thompson - What a fun story. About a service where you can accumulate, purchase and redeem points to allow you to kill without repercussions, as long as you follow the rules.

    Calm Down Time by Richard Chizmar - Molly works the late shift and needs to wind down when she gets home. Watching the news she learns of a killer on the loose in her neighborhood. Uh, oh.

    Carrion: My Wayward Son by James Newman - And the award for best title ever goes to...James Newman. This is the story of a serial killer who calls himself, THE CARRION KING. "I'm not crazy. Some men like to fish, some men like to build things, some men like to work on cars but there's only one thing I like to do and that is KILL!!!"

    Bear by Michelle Garza and Melissa Lason - I'm a big fan of the Sisters of Slaughter and here they give us a very fine ghost story set in the desert of Arizona during monsoon season.

    When Arachnids Attack by Sheri White - Why does it have to be spiders. This wonderfully horrific tale actually gave me chills.

    A Song Above by Glenn Rolfe - A post-apocalyptic tale of underground dwellers making an attempt to go topside after years below.

    This anthology features many of my favorite authors and those I had not read before had some of the best stories in the collection. I've already read a number of good anthologies in 2019 and this is one of the best.

    Whole-heartedly recommended.

    Available for pre-order, When the Clock Strikes 13, will be published for the Kindle by In Your Face Books on March 31, 2019. If you subscribe to Kindle Unlimited you can read it at no additional charge. Also, if you are an Amazon Prime member you can read it for FREE using the Kindle Owners Lending Library.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2019
    The stories I like best are the ones I can't predict the ending of...this book delivers on that,in spades! (Pun intended LOL) Usually, I only find 2 or 3 really good stories per anthology but in this book,all were very well written.(IMHO) Being ADHD if it's not interesting immediately -- I lose focus but I read EVERY word!!! Get it...it's worth the read.👻👹💀👺
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2019
    stories were all good
  • Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2020
    As a horror fan, I like to go and read with an open mind so I chose this book. This book was simple to read and you’ll appreciate this book for that.

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